Ah, good catch! I don't recall him wearing them in the game. The concept art I found online makes him like more bad ass than he did in the game.The concept art for BG3 Gale has him wearing fingerless gloves.
Looking at ripples in fabric over the mid-riff, I don't think it is elastic. I'm just using anachronistic words to describe the clothing because I'm not very educated sartorially.I think you are wrong in this interpretation. But if it were accurate, that could be considered anachronistic. Elastic* fabrics didn't start to come in until the 19th century (and then were limited to bathing, circus and theatrical costumes). 19th century Leotards were made from kitted cotton, Nylon was invented in 1935, with other synthetics following soon after.
*Wool was used for hose, but has a somewhat limited ability to return to it's original shape compared to modern synthetic fabrics.
Ah! Sorry, this thread has a lot of posts. I guess we were all in the heat of battle over glasses and didn't take proper notice.I noticed this:
Mage Hand is a cantrip.Yeah. In the same way that you can have technology that allows robots to assemble cars, but you still tie your own shoes by hand. You don't use a 7th level spell slot to turn pages on a book when fingerless gloves will do the trick.
Please don't leave, this thread will never reach 2000 posts without you!This is a horrible piece of "wizard" fantasy art IMO. I'm not going to say why, because I don't have to.
Later everyone.
Lots of people living in lots of places with names that are not traditional to that place who speak like the locals.I think you will perhaps at least admit there is a certain level of ironic humour (intended or otherwise) in a man called Jean-Luc Picard having a beautiful Shakespearian English accent and loving a very British style of tea.
Of course we nearly had a very French captain with an American/British name with Geneviève Bujold in VOY.
Actually, a very good point. I mean, wearing non-prescription glasses as a fashion choice is a thing in the real world, why not a fantasy world?Just a friendly reminder to everyone that people with disabilities are not universally or fundamentally broken and in need of fixing.
Also glasses are aesthetic, sorry I don't make the rules![]()
Actually, I like the idea of it being one piece better. It is more practical and comfortable. Keeps things from riding up, feels snug, has a slimming effect, etc.Could be. I'm thinking it is more a set that uses the same material. I don't know why, there is no visual evidence for it, but the idea of it being a "onesie" of sorts doesn't fit right with me.
Exactly. How exactly restoration magic works for various edge cases is up to the GM and players.So yes. Magic could likely give someone 20/20 vision. It could likely give someone bald hair. It could likely untwist spines, give people limbs who were born without them, and anything else you want it to do.
That doesn't mean we should see it as a world-building flaw that powerful, wealthy, beautiful people might have scars/glasses/missing limbs/need glasses.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.
(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.